Walking and Talking Movie Review
Walking and Talking Review
"Walking and Talking" Overview

Rating: R
1996
Cast and Crew
Director : Nicole HolofcenerProducer : Ted Hope,James Schamus
Screenwiter : Nicole Holofcener
Starring : Catherine Keener,Anne Heche,Todd Field,Liev Schreiber,Kevin Corrigan
Well, a lot more talking than walking.... And not to be confused with last
year's Kicking and Screaming.
And not at all a bad movie, and the most aptly titled film out right now.
Walking and Talking is basically just that, focusing on best friends Laura
(Anne Heche) and Amelia (Catherine Keener) and their comedic struggles with
life and love at the dawn of the big 3-0.
Laura is about to marry Frank (Todd Field) and is having the jitters. Amelia
is a confirmed, miserable bachelorette, and she dallies with the local video
store clerk (Kevin Corrigan), aka "The Ugly Guy," and ex-boyfriend Andrew (Liev
Schreiber).
And essentially, they all just talk. A lot. And it's pretty funny, with
topics of conversation running the gamut from cat vomit to therapy to schlock
horror flicks. The characters themselves have also been taken to the hilt.
Frank isn't just a jewelry designer -- he designs only the really tacky stuff
you'd see in a Montgomery Wards catalog. Schreiber, the funniest of the lot,
reprises his phone sex-obsessed character from Denise Calls Up, and has an
addiction to porn videos. Then there's headliners Amelia and Laura, whose
collective litany of neuroses makes me look like a sane person.
So yes, it's funny, but at some point I kept wondering, do people really talk
like this? The conversations tend to get a bit extreme and explicit -- running
into candid sexual discussions and descriptions of bodily functions that would
put off Madonna. Humorous? Sure. Realistic? I don't think so.
That's unfortunate, because this reliance on over-the-top dialogue is the only
thing that really detracts from the picture, which is otherwise a frank and
funny depiction of urban life in the 90s. (And I was a little disappointed by
the lack of a real ending, too.)
So no ending on this review, either, but you get a parting fun fact: watch for
people's kitchens -- everyone has the same toaster oven.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





